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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Gov. Haley Barbour release inmates in order to repent for a racist.

Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said Friday he's "very comfortable"
with his final-days decisions to grant pardons or other clemency to more than
200 people, including convicted killers — decisions that outraged victims'
families and dismayed even some of his most devoted supporters.

Barbour, a Republican who had considered but decided against running for
president this year, said that 189 of the people who got pardons or other
reprieves had already been released from prison before his actions. Only 10, he
said, have been or will be fully released from prison, while several with
expensive, chronic conditions are receiving medical leave.

"I am fully confident the pardons and other clemency I have given are all
valid," Barbour told reporters at a news conference, his first on the subject,
at the Jackson-area law firm where he now works.

Barbour granted pardons and other reprieves in his final days before leaving
office after two terms Tuesday. Five inmates who had worked as trusties at the
Governor's Mansion — four of them, convicted of murder — were released last
weekend. One of the freed men had fatally shot his estranged wife as she held
their baby in 1993 and then shot her male friend in the head; the friend
survived.

Barbour initially declined to comment on the pardons or to provide detailed
information about how many of those receiving them were still in prison. He then
issued a statement after leaving office, after the pardons had generated a
firestorm of criticism.

By the time state corrections officials said Wednesday that 21 on the list
were still in custody, state Attorney General Jim Hood was calling the pardons
"shameful" and questioning whether Barbour had violated the state constitution
by not ensuring inmates gave enough public notice about their possible
release.

Hood, the only statewide Democratic officeholder in Mississippi, also
persuaded a state judge to temporarily block release of the 21 still in custody.
State corrections officials said Friday they would start to release 13 of the 21
inmates because the 13 were given medical discharges and weren't bound by the
same public notice requirements before release.

Barbour on Friday reiterated that it's a tradition in Mississippi for
governors to free trusties who worked at the Governor's Mansion. And the former
governor said he's not concerned that the freed trusties might harm anyone.
"I have absolute confidence, so much confidence, that I let my grandchildren
play with these five men," Barbour, 64, said of the trusties freed this
week.

He said the Mississippi Department of Corrections picks inmates who work at
the Governor's Mansion. Typically, they are men who committed crimes of passion.
Corrections officials assign them, he said, because they are not likely to
commit another violent crime and make good workers.

Records show Barbour gave "full, complete and unconditional" pardons to 203
people, including 17 convicted of murder, 10 convicted of manslaughter, eight
convicted of aggravated assault and five convicted of drunken-driving incidents
that caused deaths.

He granted some sort of reprieve to 26 inmates who were in custody — 10 full
pardons; 13 medical releases; one suspension of sentence; one conditional,
indefinite suspension of sentence; and one conditional clemency.